We Love Travel: WAS EQM Mileage Runs

The view from United Premier Executive seats is so much better

The view from United Premier Executive seats is so much better

For those that fly often, there is not a sense of envy with the gate agent allows First Class and elite frequent flyers to board the plane first. No, there is only lust for such benefits that are often so close yet so far away at this time of year.

See, frequent flyer status is earned annually. For United, you’ll need at least 50,000 Elite Qualifying Miles (EQMs) by December 31st to maintain Premier Executive status. It may be one up from cattle class, but when you do long hauls to Europe or red-eyes from the West Coast, those emergency row seats or First Class upgrades make the flights oh so much better.

Which brings us to mileage runs – the act of flying just to maintain elite frequent flyer status. It may sound crazy, but there is a whole airline subculture focused on just such acts of desperation. And this year, at 39,200 EQMs, I’m hell-bent on earning 10,801 more by December 31, 2008.

Wanna learn how I’m doing it at no cost to me? Then keep reading…

 

Another city, another flight, another 1,000 EQMs

Another city, another flight, another 1,000 EQMs

First, you’ll need some good tools and pre-planning. Start with focusing all your flights on one airline throughout the year. For the Washington area airports (WAS), we have United out of IAD, Southwest from BWI, and US Airways from DCA.

Personally, I feel that only United has an elite status worth flying for, but others say Southwest’s free flights come quickly, even if they only fly one class of aircraft. US Airways is a sad shell of its glory days, and I avoid it along with Delta at all costs.

Next, start reading Flyer Talk forums the single best resource for frequent flyers. They have forums on ever airline program and specific forums just for mileage runs. Just do everyone a favor and read for a month before posting, so you don’t sound the fool.

Then, learn about Kayak and how to do multi-city flights on it and Orbitz. Kayak is a flight aggregator can often find deals that are hidden on other airlines, while Orbitz can often buy those tickets when airline sites cannot seem to find your goal itinerary.

Now you are ready to start thinking about mileage runs. When you do, remember that the longest distance between two points has exactly one connection. That means a IAD-SFO flight should really be IAD-SEA-SFO or a BWI-MCO flight really should be a BWI-DEN-MCO route. It may seem a little awkward at first, but you’ll often find that not only are the flights cheaper when you go out of your way, you’ll also reach the next elite status level with less flying.

Great United WAS mileage runs are the ~250$ round trips to SEA and PDX that do not require a Saturday night stay. In fact, you can fly in and out the same day, and if you go through DEN, you can pick up ~5,000 EQMs for each round trip.

So back to me and my 10,801 miles I’m earning for free. In early November, I’ll be flying BWI-DEN-PDX, spending a Saturday night there on a Portland Brew Tour, before continuing on to San Francisco for work. I’ll fly a SFO-SEA-IAD red-eye return, with both flights gladly paid for by work – this route is cheaper than IAD-SFO-IAD direct flights.

That’s the first trick to learn – often mileage runs can be cheaper than direct flights, which help in selling these odd routes to the boss.

I’ve also signed up for the United Platinum Chase credit card, which gives me 5,000 EQMs for the first year and up to 5,000 EQM’s for flights I buy with it on United.com. This is the second trick to learn, on the rare occasion, you can earn EQMs through special deals that don’t require actually flying. Although, infrequent, they do exist for those that look for them.

Next year, when you are standing in line at IAD and I waltz past you to pre-board, remember, you too can be elite. It just takes a mileage run or two.

Married, mortgaged, and soon to be a father, Wayan Vota is in the fast lane to mid-life respectability – until the day his brood finds his intimate journal of global traveling and curses him with the ever-eternal reply “I’m gonna be just like you, Dad!”

7 thoughts on “We Love Travel: WAS EQM Mileage Runs

  1. HATE USAIR. HATE HATE HATE. Horrible customer service, totally unresponsive and disrespectful, and if only they weren’t the number 1 carrier out of Charlotte, my home town, I’d never fly them ever again.

  2. PS – good, informative post. Got me all riled up when you said “US Airways is a sad shell of its glory days” though… ;)

  3. I will be interested to see what happens when USAir and Delta merge. I’ve never had that many problems with Delta, so maybe they can clean house for USAir.

    I’m at 95,600 with one trip to go. 1K here I come!

  4. Then again, they might lose your luggage on a direct flight, like what happened to Tiff & I…

    Fortunately, I had the AmEx Mafia on my side.

  5. Don;t get me started on how crap US Airways is. Even though they are Star Alliance partners, I refuse to fly them. I’d rather take Jet Blue (and for me, that’s saying a lot).

  6. now that was useful. i used to be a 40 weeks a year road warrior (too bad it was before all this freq flier stuff started).

  7. What, before frequent flyer programs? We talking the 70’s? If so, you didn’t need FF programs, flying was actually enjoyable. I’ve heard the stories of what First Class used to be like….